From Pine View Farm

August, 2017 archive

A Legacy Indeed in Deed 0

The Minneapolis Star-Tribune reports on a project to locate and expunge segregationist covenants that linger in the legal language of residential deeds. The covenants no longer have force of law, but, as property transfers have taken place, they continue to exist in the fine print. Here’s a bit:

Jade Holman was stunned to learn that buried in the fine print of the deed to the two-story stucco house he bought nearly a year ago is a clause stating that his home cannot be “transferred or leased to a colored person.”

It’s long been rendered unenforceable by state legislation and federal law, but it’s jarring nonetheless for Holman, a construction attorney, who said he’ll try to get a court to nullify it.

(snip)

So far, members of the Mapping Prejudice project have discovered some 5,000 deeds with racist restrictions. The covenants appear to be concentrated in the whitest Minneapolis neighborhoods, illustrating the long historical reach that racial restrictions have had on the city’s residential housing, while helping to explain the de facto segregation housing patterns that exist today.

If you are foolish enough to think that the past does not live into the present (or even if you are not), read the whole thing.

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Immunity Impunity, Arpaio Doctrine Dept. 0

Bunch of cops beating on a black one.  One says,

Via Job’s Anger.

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There’s an App for That 0

Thom speaks on several off-beat topics, then discusses how your smartphone spies on you. The relevant portion starts at the five-minute mark.

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Truth-in-Labeling 2

Writing at the Colorado Springs Gazette, Ari Armstrong points out that words matter. An excerpt:

The language we use to combat racism matters. Calling white supremacists, neo-Nazis, and their ilk “far right” or “extreme,” rather than white supremacists or the like, only obscures their vile nature and helps them falsely claim ties to mainstream America. White supremacists openly welcome such labels – the event in Charlottesville was called the “Unite the Right” rally.

(snip)

Neo-Nazis are quite happy to be called “far right” because of the seeming implication that they have something in common with my “center right” friends. But they have nothing in common. Being a racist is not a more extreme version of being for low taxes (or the like); logically the two things have nothing to do with each other.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Be polite to the children.

A 3-year-old girl’s father and uncle were “extremely intoxicated” and handling a firearm early Friday when it accidentally went off, the bullet hitting the child in the foot, the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office said.

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Benediction 0

Statues of Confederate officers and soldier, plus Stone Mountain, all labeled


Click for the original image.

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Happy Birthday to Me 0

From Pine View Farm is 12 years old today.

Who woulda thunk?

Along the way, I’ve learned a lot about web hosting, HTML, CSS, Linux, SQL, and computers. I’ve also learned a lot, mostly from Republicans, about hypocrisy, venality, and scurrilousness.

I value the former. I deplore the latter.

Every time I consider retiring this blog, something comes along, usually from the right side, to reset my outrage meter.

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QOTD 0

Rex Stout:

. . . he had invited luck to contribute to the great cause, by sundry means from crackaloo to 10-cent bridge, and learned to late that luck’s clock was slow.

Stout, Rex, Some Buried Caesar (New York: Bantam Dell, 2008) p. 132)

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Change of Pace 0

The old Mike Douglas Show would have weekly co-hosts. I remember watching the week that the Mills Brothers served in that role (I think only three of them were still around). I’ve liked their music ever since.

Frankie Laine also co-hosted the Douglas Show one week. By that time, he frequently wore glasses, tending to favor heavy black frames. He wore a different pair of glasses for each show, including a pair with built-in windshield wipers (which he quickly replaced after his entrance).

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Contempt for Court 2

Prior to the event, Noah Feldman wrote of the implications of Donald Trump’s (then rumored) pardoning racist bigot-panderer Joe Arpaio. A snippet (emphasis added):

But it would be an altogether different matter if Trump pardoned Arpaio for willfully refusing to follow the Constitution and violating the rights of people inside the U.S.

Such a pardon would reflect outright contempt for the judiciary, which convicted Arpaio for his resistance to its authority.

Every day of Trumpery ups the volume of vile and further erodes the rule of law.

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Know Them by the Company They Keep 0

In The Bangor Daily News, Mary-Anne Saxl states a simple truth:

As Republican U.S. Rep. Steve Stivers of Ohio said, “This isn’t hard.” In fact, it’s quite simple. “Very fine people” don’t march with Nazis.

More truth at the link.

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The Lessons of History 0

American soldier facing out of cave in Afghanistan.  Behind him leaning against the wall of the cave are skeletons of one of Alexander the Greek's soldiers, a soldier of the British Raj, and a Russian soldier.

Via Job’s Anger.

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Can the “No Account” Be Held Accountable 0

James Goodnow ponders that question at Above the Law.

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The Pusher Men 0

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Yet More Car-nage 0

Oh, hell, I tried to write something, but I couldn’t.

Words failed me.

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Still Rising Again after All These Years 0

Neo-Conderate sobbing at the base of a Confederate stutue as Heather Heyer's grave lies ignored in the background.

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QOTD 0

Naomi Klein:

Politics hates a vacuum. If it isn’t filled with hope, someone will fill it with fear.

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The Great Emaciator 0

Title:  The Alt-Right History of the Civil War:  the War of Heritage and Statues.'  Frame One:  Image of black man with slave ship in the background as a slaveholder who looks like Steve Bannon proffers a copy of


Click for the original image.

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The Warped Lens of the Perryscope 0

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“The Federal Bureau of Instigation” 0

Shaun Mullen investigates.

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